Article snippet: HOUSTON — Aracely Martinez-Ramirez sat on the driveway by her rotting home, next to most of the family’s possessions, now slated for the trash: Her sisters’ flowered dresses, their baby dolls, a mud-caked Virgin Mary. She had already battled a flood brought on by Hurricane Harvey and lost the house her family had bought — in full, in cash — just a few days before. Now, it seemed the president was looking to eliminate Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, the program for undocumented immigrants that allows her to work the three jobs that support the family. “Why would he take it away?” said Ms. Martinez-Ramirez, 20, baking in the sour post-storm Texas heat. “What did we ever do wrong to him?” Along the Gulf Coast, a panic has set in among immigrant families affected by the storm, after the White House said it would make an announcement on Tuesday about the future of DACA. Though the program, begun under President Barack Obama, has supporters in both parties, its critics call it both bad policy — suggesting that it encourages more illegal immigration — and unconstitutional. The attorney general of Texas, Ken Paxton, has been among the initiative’s most determined opponents. He wrote a letter in June threatening to sue the federal government over DACA unless the administration phased it out. The notice was signed by nine of his counterparts in other states. On Sunday, three officials told The New York Times that President Trump was strongly considering en... Link to the full article to read more